View clinical trials related to Recurrence.
Filter by:Apatinib mesylate may be an effective treatment for recurrent atypical/malignant meningioma. This prospective clinical study is now planned to verify the effectiveness and safety of apatinib mesylate in the treatment of relapsed atypical/malignant meningioma.
Liver transplant is the most effective treatment for hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) in cirrhosis. Due to organs shortage, the proper selection of patients is imperative. Prevailing clinical morphological models used in most centres (Milan Criteria), can exclude potential candidates and include patients with aggressive biological behaviour. To more accurately select candidates for liver transplant, the inclusion of criteria that could predict the behaviour and aggressiveness of tumours, such as molecular markers, might be useful. The investigators propose the use of a new algorithm (HepatoPredict Prognostic Tool), that combine clinical and molecular criteria that address the biology of tumours, in a single centre prospective, intervention study. Data from the "HepatoPredict genomic signature" are added to the clinical and imagiology algorithm. Based on this tool, patients outside the usual eligibility criteria for liver transplant will be proposed for this treatment. These patients will be transplanted with marginal livers or with livers from patients with Familial Amyloid Polyneuropathy, not competing with patients on the waiting list. Patients will be followed up to 60 months after transplant, to assess survival and HCC recurrence with biannual imagiology screening. Survival and disease-free-survival rates will be compared with those obtained by the usual management of patients included and excluded by Milan Criteria.
This phase I/II trial studies the side effects and best dose of quizartinib when given with azacitidine and to see how well they work in treating patients with myelodysplastic syndrome or myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasm with FLT3 or CBL mutations. Chemotherapy drugs, such as azacitidine, work in different ways to stop the growth of cancer cells, either by killing the cells, by stopping them from dividing, or by stopping them from spreading. Quizartinib may stop the growth of cancer cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Giving azacitidine and quizartinib may help to control myelodysplastic syndrome or myelodysplastic/myeloproliferative neoplasm.
Local recurrence rates in rectal cancer have reduced dramatically since the introduction of the total mesorectal excision (TME) technique and neoadjuvant (chemo)radiotherapy (C))RT) to overall rates of 5-year local recurrence to 5-10%. However, distal rectal cancers have a tendency to spread to lateral lymph nodes and it was recently shown that patients with enlarged lateral lymph nodes of ≥7mm short-axis size have a considerable chance of a local recurrence: 15-20%. This is regardless of CRT with TME in two retrospective cohorts (Lateral Node Consortium and Snapshot Rectal Cancer 2016 study). According to the Lateral Node Consortium study, this rate was significantly reduced to <6% when performing a lateral lymph node dissection (LLND) after (C)RT + TME. A major drawback of these recent multi-center studies is their retrospective nature. Therefore, in the Netherlands, radiologists, radiation oncologists, surgeons and pathologists have recently been educated and trained to enhance knowledge and awareness of LLNs and to implement nerve-sparing minimally invasive LLND. The LaNoReC trial is a prospective registration study aimed at evaluating oncological outcomes after multi-disciplinary training. The main question of this study is whether, after dedicated training and the performance of LLNDs, the lateral local recurrence rate in rectal cancers with enlarged nodes (≥7mm) can be reduced to below 6%.
This phase I trial studies the side effects and best dose of trametinib and everolimus in treating pediatric and young adult patients with gliomas that have come back (recurrent). Trametinib acts by targeting a protein in cells called MEK and disrupting tumor growth. Everolimus is a drug that may block another pathway in tumor cells that can help tumors grow. Giving trametinib and everolimus may work better to treat low and high grade gliomas compared to trametinib or everolimus alone.
This is an open-label, two-part, phase 1-2 dose-finding study designed to determine the safety, tolerability, PK, PD, and proof-of-concept efficacy of ST101 administered IV in patients with advanced solid tumors. The study consists of two phases: a phase 1 dose escalation/regimen exploration phase and a phase 2 expansion phase.
This is a phase 0/1 dose-escalation trial to determine the maximum tolerated dose of Mycophenolate Mofetil (MMF) when administered with radiation, in patients with glioblastoma or gliosarcoma.
Hormone receptor-positive breast cancer accounts for about 70% of all breast cancers. Extended endocrine therapy with aromatase inhibitor is the current main treatment for hormone receptor-positive breast cancer. However, previous studies have shown a long-lasting risk of the recurrence of hormone receptor-positive breast cancer at early stage, and disease recurrence is considered inevitable only depending on a 5-year of adjuvant endocrine therapy. Therefore, extended endocrine therapy is considered as a possible measure to reduce the risk of recurrence. Numerous clinical studies have focused on extended endocrine therapy in patients with specific types of breast cancer. In 2017, the National Comprehensive Cancer Network (NCCN) updated the recommends for extended endocrine therapy with aromatase inhibitor, where postmenopausal early-stage breast cancer patients wo have high risk factors may be considered to be given an extended 5-year endocrine treatment with aromatase inhibitor after the initial 5-year treatment. In 2019, the Chinese Society of Clinical Oncology also suggested that postmenopausal hormone receptor-positive patients who have been well tolerated to the initial 5 years of adjuvant endocrine therapy can be given the extended endocrine therapy under some restrictions. However, extended endocrine therapy may also cause other risks in patients. Long-term tamoxifen treatment can significantly increase the incidence of adverse reactions such as endometrial cancer, thrombotic disease, and dyslipidemia, and long-term aromatase inhibitor treatment can also increase the incidence of osteoporosis, fractures, dyslipidemia, and hypertension. Although anti-cancer treatment can reduce cancer deaths, it may increase deaths due to cardiovascular diseases. An attempt has been proposed to find out an indicator that can effectively determine the necessity of extended endocrine therapy in such patients, not only improving the prognosis of breast cancer patients, but also reducing treatment-related side effects. The author's team recently discovered sj-subway, a possible factor with a long tubular structure in breast cancer lesions. The authors found that the higher expression of sj-subway indicates the worse patient's prognosis. So the positive expression of sj-subway may be a predictor of recurrence and metastasis in high-risk hormone receptor-positive patients. However, whether this predictor can be used clinically remains to be studied. This real-world study intends to analyze the difference in the clinical efficacy of extended endocrine therapy under different sj-subway expression in high-risk hormone receptor-positive breast cancer patients, and to explore whether sj-subway can screen out the patients who can benefit from extended endocrine therapy, thus providing a therapeutic help for hormone receptor-positive breast cancer patients.
This is a phase II interventional trial to evaluate if the use of ponatinib, with or without chemotherapy, can induce a molecular remission in MRD-positive patients, in patients in hematologic and extra-hematologic relapse and in the few patients who never achieved an hematologic remission after whatever prior treatment.
This phase II trial studies how well abemaciclib works in treating patients with ovarian or endometrial cancer that has an activation of the CDK4/6 pathway and that has come back (recurrent). Abemaciclib may stop the growth of tumor cells by blocking some of the enzymes needed for cell growth. Giving abemaciclib may work better for the treatment of recurrent ovarian and endometrial cancer.